18 Şubat 2018 Pazar

Contradiction of Religious Origin and Secular Nation-Building: The Case of Turkey and Israel

INTRODUCTION                                                                                              Zehra Nur Düz
Even though Kemalism and Zionism officialy decleares that all citizens from different ethnic, religious and sectarian groups had equal rights in their states and they have an democratic, secular, civic, territorial, non-ethnic and non-religious understanding of nationalism; they made a religious and ethnic definitions of Jewish and Turkish identitiy and in both cases we can observe the primacy of religion over ethnicity. So my research question is that despite their emphasis on secularism and non-ethnic nationalism; why Kemalism and Zionism still identified Islam and Judaism as the most important factors for access to their countries?
My main aim is to explain the contradictions of religious origins and secular nation-building processes in Turkey and Israel. So, in this study I also seek answers to sub -question of ‘how these countries cope with this contradiction?‘’.  I also try to answer the other sub questions of ‘’Is Israel a secular state or a Jewish state?’’, ‘’ Is Turkey a secular state or a Muslim state?’’.
The main thesis of this research is that the modern nationalist ideology did not extinguish religious envision in these countries, rather it maintained religion by transforming it. In both countries secularization processes made radical changes in the meaning of religion. Through secularization processes the religious faith was excluded from the public domain.
However Kemalist and Zionist ideologies did not think Islam and Judaism only as a faith. Religion can serve also as a culture, as a identity and even as a ideology. As a result of this understanding the faith dimension of the religion was marginalized and excluded from the society. However ‘nominal’ Islam and Judaism as a culture and identitiy maintained its central position in the society. Kemalism and Zionism accepted nominal Islam and Judaism as important determinants of Turkishness and Jewishness. So we can not define Kemalist and Zionis regimes as totally anti-religious. What is aimed with the secularization process was creating of more secular, modern and national religions. We can define these two states as ’ secular states in religious cohabitation.’’
KEMALISM
There is a disagreement among scholars to explain how Turkish nationhood is defined after the establishment of Republic. 1st view: The classical view describes Republic’s understanding of nationalism as civic, territorial and non-ethnic in parallel with official definition which is in the constitution and other official documents. To support this argument they show the Mustafa Kemal’s motto of ‘’Happy is he who calls himself a Turk’’. According to this understanding, all people who live in Turkey have the right to call himself a ‘’Turk’’.
From this point of view they interpret Kemaslist consideration of citizenship as more inclusive than Ottoman Empire. According to this view, with the establishment of Turkish republic a new modern society was created and in this society all citizens from different ethnic, religious and sectarian groups had equal rights. They especially emphasize the important role which is played by the principle of secularism in removing the religiously defined millets, and gathering all citizens under the modern and secular nation. (Aktürk, 2009, p.894-896)
2nd view: As against this view; critical scholars evaluates Republic’s understanding of Turkish nationhood as ethnic and racial with reference to official policies of the state. These scholars argue that the ethnic identity started to play an important role for the definition of nationhood after the transition from Empire to Republic. Some others, in a different way, evaluate this ethnic base approach as a continuation. They argues that the Republic identified the Turks with reference to the Ottoman Muslim Millet and non-Turks with reference to the Ottoman Christians. Because both in the Ottoman Empire and in the Republic the language of the state was Turkish. Also, the ethnic minorities, even Muslim ones like Arabs, who maintain and defend their ethnic and linguistic identities were exluded from this Anatolian-Rumelian millet. They show the assimilation of different ethnic Muslim groups during Republican era as an evidence to their argument. In other words they concentrate their focuses on the Turkification policies of the Republic rather than Muslimification. The exclusion of different ethnic Muslim minorities from the borders of ‘’Turkishness’’ was the main aim of these Turkification policies. (Karpat, 2007, p.325)
3rd view: As opposed to both of these positions there are some scholars who suggests that the Republic’s nationalism was neither civic nor mono-ethnic. Instead, with reference to official state policies, they argues that the definition of Turkish nationhood was mono-religious and anti-ethnic which is totally against the official secularism and democracy principle. In other words; the borders of Turkish nationhood was determined by religion not ethnicity. The main reason for this fact is that the modern Turkish millet(nation) shows a remerkable permanency with the legacy of the Ottoman millet system. (Aktürk, 2009, p.908)
We can varify this argument by analysing the state’s immigration policies, regulations on citizenship, public employment and minority policies. The 1924 exchange of populations between Turkey and Greece is one of the most remerkable evidence that shows the priority of religion to ethnicity. With this exchange almost all Anatolian Christians whose native language was Turkish and define themselves to be Turkish were deported to Greece. On the other hand Creatan Muslims who speaks Greek were deported to Turkey. Turkey’s support for the immigration of Balkan Muslims from different ethnicities to Turkey, and on the other hand Turkey’s rejection of the immigration of Orthodox Gagauz Turks to Turkey are also strong evidences. The ethnic Jewish Sabbatean community’s immigration to Turkey can also be interpreted in the same way.
The state wanted to assimilate these different Muslim ethnic  minorites, both immigrants and natives like Kurds, Arabs, Lazes and Georgians, into the culture of the Turkish speaking majority. The assimilation of natives were much more difficult than immigrants for the state and still it is.
We can categorize discrimination against non-Muslims like Jews, Greeks and Armenians, the three official minorities and three of the historic Ottoman millets, into two groups: official and societal discrimination. The official discrimination can also be subcategorized into two groups: instances of discrimination and systematic discrimination. (Aktürk, 2009, p.897)
The Thracian events of 1934, discrimination against non-Muslim individuals and the events of antisemitism during 1920s and 1930s can be given as examples to the instances of discrimination. However, the Wealth Tax of 1940 and the attacks of 5-6 September 1955 can be count as the most important ones.
The lack of employment opportunities in bureaucracy, in military and the lack of representation in the Turkish Parliament shows clearly the systemic discrimination against non-Muslims. Also we see the official registration of these groups as Jewish, Greek Orthodox etc.; which is not the case for Muslim citizens. This example shows strikingly how the population is classified according to religious identities.
However, the mono-religious definition of Turkish Nationhood and Turkish state’s discriminatation in favor of Sunni Orthodox Islam contradict with Republic’s secularizing reforms. These reforms started with the abolishment of the caliphate on November 2, 1924. Changing the Muslim sabbath, Friday into Sunday, the abolishment of the Ministry for Islamic Law and pious foundations, shutting down of religious seminaries, giving the religious high schools to the control of Ministry of Education, closing of Sufi dervish lodges, declaration of the fez illegal and forcing all men to wear western-style hats, abondining the lunar calendar and clock and switching to the Gregorian calendar and solar clock, TBMM’s approving of a secular civil code, the annulling of the Shariat courts, declaring Islamic law invalid, eliminating the declaration of Islam as Turkey’s state religion from constitution, and lastly dropping the Arabic alphabet and switching over to Latin alphabet were the reforms which were introduced during 1920s.( Çagaptay, 2006, p.14)
Secularization process affected the Kemalist understanding of nationalism. Until the mid way of 1920s the Islam was seen as the main consolidative factor among Muslims. Islam was important for Kemalism not only as a main paramater of Turkish nationhood. They recognized Islam also as a key for access to their country. The state functionalized Islam as a homogenizing, mobilizer and integrative tool to protect the integrity of the country. Because religions contributes to a sense of national unity and national identity. Religions are thought as a very strong common bond among the citizens of nation. For example; Islamic identity played an important role during the National Struggle and Muslims were mobilized against unbelievers. The leadership mobilized the Anatolian Turkish Muslims by emphasizing their common religion.
However in parallel with secularizing reforms the significance of Islam for Kemalism’s notion of Turkishness has decreased. Instead Kemalism devoloped a varied definition of nation. They started to give new references to the Turkish territory, language, to a shared past, shared interests, feelings and ideas, and also to ‘the desire to live together’. ( Çagaptay, 2006, p.14)
Through secularization process the Islamic faith was excluded from the public domain. However Kemalist ideology did not think Islam only as a faith. Islam can serve also as a culture, as a identity and even as a ideology for the Muslims. As a result of the secularization process; the faith dimension of the religion was marginalized and excluded from the society. However ‘nominal’ Islam as a culture and identitiy maintained its central position in the society. Kemalism accepted nominal Islam, cultural and unifiying, as an important determinant of Turkishness.
With reference to the discriminations against non-Muslims which I have mentioned above we can suggest that ‘’despite its commitment to secularism as well as territorial- voluntaristic-linguistic forms of citizenship, Kemalist nationalism was still molded by Islam.’’( Çagaptay, 2006, p.15) So we can not define Kemalist regime as totally anti-religious. What is aimed with the secularization process was creating a more secular, modern and national Islam.
ZIONISM
In 1947, after the Nazi massacre, many thousands of Jewish persons left homeless. The oppressions and discriminations against Jews strengthened their claim for sovereignty and self determination and improved their common identity. This situation posed a serious problem for the Western countries. To solve this Jewish problem establishment of a ‘Jewish’ state besides an Arab state in the ‘Eretz Israel’ was decided by the 1947 UN General Assembly resolution. This resolution guarenteed civil rights for minorities in these two new states.
However the definition of the term ‘Jew’ for the new state stayed as a identity problem for a long time for the Zionist elite. Because there was a contradiction between the democratic provisions and demands of UN and Zionist vision of establishment of an Jewish state. The articles of the 1948 Decleration of the Establishment of The State of Israel shows this contradiction clearly. On the one part; it describes an inclusive nationalism that provides equal social and political rights for all of its citizens from different ethnic and religious origins. On the other part; it recognizes ‘’the right of the Jewish people in its own country through the founding of a ‘Jewish’ state.’’(Sand, 2009, 280-282)
With this decleration both Jews and non-Jews are defined as Israelis. However the state did not want to accept the fact that state belongs to its all citizens without noticing their religious and ehnic differences. They believed that the state had been founded only for the Jewish people. In other words it had an ethno- religious nationalist feature in nature. At this point we need to ask the questions of ‘’what is the definition of the Jewish ethnos?’’ and ‘’who stays within the borders of this new Jewish state and who are excluded?’’.
To answer this question we need to first analyse the relationship between religion and nationalism in the context of Israel. In the Israel there were a main conflict between religious and secular groups. On the one hand; rabbinical wing and its theocratic tradition was always an important obstacle for Jewish nationalism. On the other hand; to realize the purposes of Zionism, the state exploited the Jewish religion many times. Despite this contradiction between religion and nationalism; religion played a complementary role for nationalism. Nationalism worked in cooperation with religion to realize its mission. So we can define Israel as ‘’a secular state in religious cohabitation.’’(Sand, 2009, 284)
Rather than a secular definition; the state had to make a religious definition of Jewish identitiy. Even though the state tried to build a secular Israeli culture; this culture could not unite Israelis who came from different parts of the world and who are culturally very different from each other. Even though this new secular culture obtained its some specialities from Jewish sources it also refused this rabbinical tradition. Because of this new culture’s incompatibility with Jewish religious cultures, the Jews could not embrace it. From this point of view; we can suggest that the old religious culture sustains its positon as the primary consolidative and integrative ground for international Jewry. The dream of the creating a secular Jewish culture which embrace all the Jews in the world has never been realized. (Sand, 2009, 285)
We should also analyse the modern nationalism’s transformative effect on religion. The modern nationalist ideology did not extinguish religious envision, rather it maintained religion by transforming it. Politicians have used religion as a tool to reach their ethnocentric nationalistic purposes. Nationalism receives many of its imaginations and symbols from the religious sources. In short, Zionist ideology forms an idiosyncratic combination between ethnocentric nationalism and traditional religion.

Such kind of an nationalism revolutionized the meaning of religion. Religion is not be understood as a personal belief anymore rather it is transformed into an indicator and symbol of Jews’ collective identity and dividedness. Religion gained a new unholy function: it turned into an ethnic feature that is natural, organic, unchangeable rather than respective liability and an option. Liah Greenfeld describes such kind of an understanding of religion as a reflection of race. (Sand, 2009, 286)
With reference to the explanations above now we can give answers to the questions of ’what is the definition of the Jewish ethnos?’’ and ‘’who stays within the borders of this new Jewish state and who are excluded?’’Determining the limits and borders of its national identity was a very serious problem for Israel.  A lot of scientific efforts which was spent to describe who was a Jew and who was a gentile became unsuccessful.
 To solve this identity problem in the beginning the state made an democratic and inclusive definition that is based on consent. The 1950 Law of Return gave every Jew who was exposed to discrimination the right to migrate to Israel as long as he/she does not pose any threat to the healt or the security of the state. However in 1958 the state started to define the ‘Jew’ relying on the mother’s identity. Finally; the religion laid down as a precondition to nationality. Halakhic doctrines became the primary condition for ethnocentric Zionism.
In 1970, an amendment was made to the Law of Return and the people of Israel is defined very clearly. To become a Jew, one should have been has a Jewish mother and should have been become Jewish. (Sand, 2009, 286-292)In short, finally a connection between  religion and nationalism was established legally. On the other hand; Israel moved totally away from a liberal democracy. So, today it is impossible to mention about an Israeli nation. Instead we can talk about a Jewish nation. With reference to its current occupation and settlement policies; it seems still very difficult to talk about an Israeli identity.
COMPARISION: During my article I have tried to explain the difficulties that Kemalism and Zionism face for the definition of nationhood. Both of them officialy decleares that all citizens from different ethnic, religious and sectarian groups had equal rights in their states. In other words they claim that they have an democratic, secular, civic, territorial, non-ethnic and non-religious understanding of nationalism.
However as I explained above this is not the reality. Rather than a secular and democratic definition; these state made a religious and ethnic definitions of Jewish and Turkish identitiy and in both cases we can observe the primacy of religion over ethnicity. We can varify this argument by analysing these two states’ immigration policies, regulations on citizenship and minority policies. While Turkey discriminated against non-Muslims like Jews, Greeks and Armenians; Israel discriminated against gentiles.
The comparison of Turkey and Israel in terms of  the contradiction of religious origins(Islamic and rabbinical heritage) and secular nation-building process is also possible. The ethnic- religious definition of their nationhood and these states’ discriminatation in favor of Sunni Orthodox Islam and Judaism contradict with these states’ secularizing reforms. Even though these new secular cultures obtained their some specialities from religious sources their efforts to build secular cultures became unsuccessful. Even though this new secular culture obtained its some specialities from Jewish and Islamic sources, ironically they also refused these religious traditions. Because of these new culture’s incompatibility with Jewish and Islamic cultures, the Jews could not embrace it. From this point of view; we can suggest that the old religious culture sustains its positon as the primary consolidative and integrative ground for both states.
In both countries despite the contradiction between religion and nationalism; religion played a complementary role for nationalism. Nationalism worked in cooperation with religion to help to realize its mission. So we can define these states as ‘’ secular states in religious cohabitation.’’
The modern nationalism’s transformative effect on religion was also common for these two states. The modern nationalist ideology did not extinguish religious envision in these countries, rather it maintained religion by transforming it. Politicians have used religion as a tool to reach their ethnocentric nationalistic purposes by receiving many of their nationalistic imaginations and symbols from the religious sources.
In both countries secularization processes made radical changes in the meaning of religion. Through secularization processes the religious faith was excluded from the public domain. However Kemalist and Zionist ideologies did not think Islam and Judaism only as a faith. Religions can serve also as a culture, as a identity and even as a ideology. As a result of this understanding the faith dimension of the religion was marginalized and excluded from the society.
 However ‘nominal’ Islam and Judaism as a culture and identitiy maintained its central position in the society. Kemalism and Zionism accepted nominal Islam and Judaism as important determinants of Turkishness and Jewishness. So we can not define Kemalist and Zionis regimes as totally anti-religious. What is aimed with the secularization process was creating of more secular, modern and national religions.
THEORETICAL EXPLANATION   
There is a common understanding that the religion and nationalism are contradictory terms. People generally think that nationalism, which is a secular phenomena by its nature, arised with the decline of religion. According to this approach nationalist politics based on claims made in the name of the nation remain distinct from forms of religious politics that seek to transfrom public life not in the name of the nation, but in the name of god. As I will explain below; other approaches states that political actors may make claims both in the name of the nation and in the name of God.
This modernisationist notion which sees nationalism as noticeably a secular fact by was been criticised by some scholars. They are critisizing these arguments by covering many linkages between religion and nationalism. The other approaches which I will mention below does not see religion and nationalism as completely seperate terms and they try to explore the several connections and closeness between religion and nationalism. ( Brubaker, 2012, p.1-3 , 15-17)To analyse the relationship of religion and nationalism in the context of Turkey and Israel these other approaches are useful.
* As Anthony Smith argues; religious motives, narratives and symbols may be transfering into the political area and may be used to constitute nationalist arguments.( Brubaker, 2012, 5-8) In other words; religion can support to the improvement of nationalism through the political adoption of religious symbols and narratives. This was the case both in Turkey and Israel as I explained above.
*Nationalist theses are also sometimes generated correspondingly with religious theses. The ‘’myth of ethnic election’’ is given as an example to this situation by Smith. Nationalism may undertake a religious characteristic, by accepting some of the shapes and functions of religion. Similarly, religion can comply with the arguments of nation-state and religious leaders can use a nationalist language. ( Brubaker, 2012, 5-8) The motif of ‘chosen people’ in the Israel case, while Turkish History thesis and Sun Language Theory may be the well-directed examples for this argument.
*Also in some cases religion becomes deeply imbricated or intertwined with nationalism and  it provides myths and metaphors to the nation. Religious sources supports nationalism to explain the questions of ‘’who are we’’ and ‘what is special about us’’. Sometimes religious discourses become very useful to describe the specific feature, mission or fate of a nation. Also the ‘nationalization’or ‘politicisation’ of religion in its organizational and practical as well as discursive aspects promotes to the symbiosis of religious and national traditions. ( Brubaker, 2012, 8-12)
*In some ways religion helps explain nationalism’s origin, its power or its distinctive character. Benedict Anderson evaluates ‘nation’ as the continuation of ‘religious community’. (Anderson, 2006, 9-37) Religion has played an important role in formation of nationalism as an ideology. Hobsbawm states that religion can be used as the proto-nationalism or as the antecedent of nationalism. Because during nation building processes it can be used as a tool to unite people together and to mobilize them. (Hobsbawm,1993, 89) The continuing legacy of the Ottoman millet system in the case of Turkey and the turning of Judaism from a religion into a nation can be given as examples to this explanation.
* Nationalism and nation building processes has determined the modern and social formation of religion. During nation building processes religion has been ideologised and religion transformed into a world view and an ideology. Nationalist ideology does not extinguish religious envision, rather nationalism maintains religion by transforming and nationalizing it. We can define this situation as ‘the secularization of the sacred’.  
*Some scholars like Elias defines nationalism  as a ‘secular belief system’.  Nationalism with its own religious rituals, myths, symbols, its speculative theology or mythology, pilgrimages, holy days, patriotic heroes, sacred places and its supreme sacrifice is defined as a religion by Calton Hayes.(Hayes, 1995) Anthony Smith also defines nationalism as ‘the new religion of the people’.(Smith, 2003) We can interpret this as the religious matrix of the category of the secular itself.
*In his book Tanıl Bora states that we should not think nationalism only as a modernization ideology. Because even though nationalism shares some common senses with modernity; it also shows very important similarities with religion. Elias defines nationalism as ‘the birth of a new mystic’ and as a ‘new sense of community’ that substitutes the sense of religious community. (Bora, 2009, 97-104)Nationalism meets the need of spirituality by sacralizing the nation. From this point of view. Bora evaluates nationalism and religion together as reactions against modernity and universalist - secular asimilation.
In his books Bora explains how religion and nationalism are combined. He mentions about a paradox between these two. (Bora, 2009, 99-104) Even though religion contributes to nationalism in many ways, it impedes nationalism’s modernization mission. In a historical context where these ideologies are rival to each other, especially during nation building processes, this paradox constitute major problems. ‘Nationalizing religion’ and ‘religionizing nationalism’ are the ideal typical solutions to this paradox. Through these ways religion and nationalism are combined.
CONCLUSION
I chose these two countries to analyse this contradiction. Because both of them were established as secular and ethno-nationalist states and in both states the nationalism contradict with both religion and national and religious minorities. In addition to this; when we compare the nation-building processes of Israel and Turkey, we see also some other historical and cultural similarities. For example; both of them were founded as a result of war and through mass immigrations and exiles. Also in both of them the minorities were exposed to human rights abuses. Both Zionism and Kemalism convert their religions into the special characteristic of their nation. They changed religious communities into national communities  and turned religion into ethnicity.

- Soner Çağaptay, Islam, Secularism and Nationalism in Modern Turkey Who is a Turk? (London & New York: Routledge, 2006), pp. 102-162.
-Kemal H. Karpat,  Review of Islam, Secularism and Nationalism in Modern Turkey Who is a Turk?,  International Journal of Middle East Studies. 39(2):324-326; Cambridge University Press, 2007. Language: English
-Aktürk, Şener, Persistence of the Islamic Millet as an Ottoman Legacy: Mono-Religious and Anti-Ethnic Definition of Turkish Nationhood, Middle Eastern Studies. 45(6):893-909, 2009
-Kolsky, Thomas, Jews Against Zionism, Temple University Press, 1992
-Mesut Yeğen, “Turkish Nationhood: Civic and Ancestral and Cultural”, Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 23:3, 2017, pp. 318-339.
-Seth J. Frantzman, Terra Incognıta: The Turkısh Roots Of Israel’s Polıtıcs: Insıde The Deep State, The Jeruselam Post, September 4, 2016
-Brubaker, Rogers, 2012 Religionand Nationalism: FourApproaches, Nations and Nationalism,18(1) ,2-20
-Anderson, Benedict, 2006, Imagined Communities, Verso,
-Hobsbawm, E.J. 1993,Milletler ve Milliyetçilik, İstanbul: Ayrıntı Yayınları,
 -Hayes, Carlton J.H.,1994 Milliyetçilk: Bir Din, İstanbul: İzi
-Smith, A.D., 2003. Chosen Peoples, Oxford: Oxford University Press
-Bora, Tanıl, 2009, Türk Sağının Üç Hali: Milliyetçilk, Muhafazakarlık, İslamcılık,İstanbul: Birikim Yayınları
-Bora, Tanıl, 2017, Cereyanlar;Türkiye’de Siyasi İdeolojiler , İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları








13 Şubat 2018 Salı

The ideological roots of AK Party-MHP Alliance

INTRODUCTION
From the beginning of AK Party rule MHP was a part of the opposition, but all of a sudden there was a secret coalition. This came as an astonishment especially for younger generations. Rather then actual political motives, causes and calculations behind this alignment; with my research I aim to analyse ‘’what lies within the ideological roots of this alignment?’’
In today’s Turkey the frontiers among nationalist and Islamist and conservative positions became heavily indistinct and the transitions between them heavily increased. This new trend in political ideology directed me to question the relationship between Islamism and nationalism in Turkey and motived me to analyze the common roots of Turkish nationalism with Islamic thought. So, during my research I will try to explain how Islamism and nationalism can come and keep together on the theoric and on the political level.
My main argument is that to interpret the current Ak Party – MHP alliance in the ideological level; rather than thinking nationalism, conservatism and Islamism as different and totally contested political and ideological positions; we should think them as deeply imbricated and intertwined with each other. Because throughout history these two positions showed multiple connections, affinities and transitivities.
In the first part of my research I will explain someways of analysing the relationship between religion and nationalism with referance to some theorists. In the second part I will mention about the historical background and I will explain the roots of this new trend in the political ideology and in the Turkish politcal life.



THEORETICAL EXPLANATION   
Religion and nationalism are mainly thought as contested terms and the relationship between them as contrary. It is a commonly shared idea that nationalism, which is a secular phenomena by its nature, arised from the decline of religion. In other words it is assumed that religion was replaced by nationalism. According to this approach nationalist politics based on claims made in the name of the nation remain distinct from forms of religious politics that seek to transfrom public life not in the name of the nation, but in the name of god. As I will explain below; other approaches states that political actors may make claims both in the name of the nation and in the name of God.
The understanding of nationalism as a distinctively secular phenomenon by long-dominant modernisationist theorists(ex. Deutsch, Gellner, Breuilly, Hechter and Anderson) was been criticised by some scholars. They have challenged the notion that modernity requires the privitization of religion. They are critisizing modernisationist arguments by concealing some connections between religion and nationalism. The other approaches which I will mention below does not see religion and nationalism as completely seperate terms and they try to explore the multiple connections and affinities between religion and nationalism. In my study I will use these other approaches to answer my research question.
*In some cases religion helps explain things about nationalism. As Anthony Smith argues; religious motives, narratives and symbols may be transmitted into the political domain and may be used to construct the nationalist claims.( Brubaker, 2012, 5-8) In other words; religion can contribute to the devolopment of nationalism through the political appropriation of religious symbols and narratives.

Nationalist claims are also sometimes formulated in paralel with religious claims. The motif of chosen-ness; ‘’myth of ethnic election’’is given as an example to this situation by Smith. Nationalism may assume a religious quality, taking over some of the forms and functions of religion. Similarly, religion can accommodate the claims of nation-state and religious movements can deploy nationalist language. From this point of view we can say that nationalist politics and national consciouness may emerge in a period of intensified, rather than declining, religiosity and they can emerge as an unintended consequence of religious devolopments.
*Also in some cases religion can be part of the nationalism rather than an external explanation of it. In these cases religion becomes deeply imbricated or intertwined with nationalism and it supplies myths, metaphors that are central to the discursive or iconic representation of the nation. In other words religious resources help to answer the questions of ‘’who are we’’, ‘what is distinctive about us in terms of history, character, identity, mission, or destiny?’’. Sometimes religious language and imagery are used to frame talk about the special character, mission or destiny of a nation. Also the ‘nationalization’or ‘politicisation’ of religion in its organizational and practical as well as discursive aspects promotes to the symbiosis of religious and national traditions.
*Also; there is a claim that there is a distinctively religious type of nationalism that represents a distinct alternative to secular nationalism: religious nationalism. In this type the focus is on the distinctively religious content of programmes for ordering and regulating of public and private life rather than on religious inflection of political rhetoric that I’ve mentioned above.

Brubaker, Rogers, ReligionandNationalism: FourApproaches, Nations and Nationalism,18(1),2012,2-20

In some ways religion helps explain nationalism’s origin, its power or its distinctive character. Benedict Anderson evaluates ‘nation’ as the continuation of ‘religious community’. (Anderson, 2006, 9-37) Religion has played an important role in formation of nationalism as an ideology. Hobsbawm states that religion can be used as the proto-nationalism or as the antecedent of nationalism. Because during nation building processes it can be used as a tool to unite people together and to mobilize them. (Hobsbawm,1993, 89)
* In a similar way nationalism and nation building processes has determined the modern and social formation of religion. During nation building processes religion has been ideologised and religion transformed into a world view and an ideology. Nationalist ideology does not extinguish religious envision, rather nationalism maintains religion by transforming and nationalizing it. We can define this situation as ‘the secularization of the sacred’.  
*Some scholars like Elias defines nationalism  as a ‘secular belief system’.  Nationalism with its own religious rituals, myths, symbols, its speculative theology or mythology, pilgrimages, holy days, patriotic heroes, sacred places and its supreme sacrifice is defined as a religion by Calton Hayes.(Hayes, 1995) Anthony Smith also defines nationalism as ‘the new religion of the people’.(Smith, 2003) We can interpret this as the religious matrix of the category of the secular itself.
In his book Tanıl Bora states that we should not think nationalism only as a modernization ideology. Because even though nationalism shares some common senses with modernity; it also shows very important similarities with religion. Elias defines nationalism as ‘the birth of a new mystic’ and as a ‘new sense of community’ that substitutes the sense of religious community. (Bora, 2009, 97-104)Nationalism meets the need of spirituality by sacralizing the nation. From this point of view. Bora evaluates nationalism and religion together as reactions against modernity and universalist - secular asimilation.
In his books Bora explains how religion and nationalism are combined. He mentions about a paradox between these two. (Bora, 2009, 99-104) Even though religion contributes to nationalism in many ways, it impedes nationalism’s modernization mission. In a historical context where these ideologies are rival to each other, especially during nation building processes, this paradox constitute major problems. ‘Nationalizing religion’ and ‘religionizing nationalism’ are the ideal typical solutions to this paradox. Through these ways religion and nationalism are combined. Bora explains the occurrence of Conservatism within this framework. We can say that Conservatism played an combining role between thse two. Because this ideology doesn not see nationalism and nation states as results of modernity or as contradictory with religion. Conservatism believed that the aim of building a social order which is eroded by modernization and enlightenment can be realized through nation states. (Bora,2017,357) Conservatives believe that modernization destroyes national and cultural codes of society and it resists modernization’s negative effects through nationalism.
Main Argument: This theoretical approaches that explain the multiple connections and affinities between religion and nationalism are useful to explain the relationship between Islamism and nationalism in the context of current Turkish politics. To interpret the current Ak Party – MHP alliance in th ideological level; rather than thinking nationalism, conservatism and Islamism as different and totally contested political and ideological positions; we should think them as deeply imbricated and intertwined with each other. Bora, does not think nationalism, conservatism and Islamism as the ideological elements or components of right-wing politics in Turkey. According to him they do not express fixed positions anymore. Rather he thinks them as the ‘states’ of Turkish political right. He uses the analogy of ‘states of matter’ to show their interconverting quality and to explain the transitivity among them. He thinks nationalism as the grammer, Islamism as the vocabulary and conservatism as the tone or mode or style of Turkish political right. (Bora, 2009, 7-12)  In the next part of the article to test the Bora’s hypotheses and other theories that I have presented above; I will discuss the relationships and transitivities among these two positions throughout history.
ISLAMISM AND NATIONALISM IN TURKEY: HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
If we look at the current devolopments from the aspect of ideological trends throughout the history, we see that there are strong roots of  this new trend in political ideology that stretch back a long way. If we look at the movements of political thought in the late Ottoman Empire; we see that there were tides, transitions and indefinities between Islamism and Turkish nationalism. They were intertwined in the levels of programmes, targets, arguments and symbols. The ideological trends of this term clearly shows the transitivity between Islamism and nationalism. Efforts for nation building and rejuvenation of religion continued simultaneously. To recover state and religion, Ottoman intellectuals were inclined to accept a nationalism whose subject is determined by religion. They have started to see Muslim community as a modern nation. An effort to make all Muslims a part of a nation had started. From this point of view some Turkish intellectuals argue that we can think Islam as the proto-nationalism or as the antecedent of nationalism in a similar way with Hobsbawm. Because Islam gave inspiration to Turkish nationalism.
Early on; the term ‘nation’ was used with its Islamic meaning and meant religious community. Islam rather than ethnicity was seen as the main constituent element of society. Islamists opposed to ethnic nationalism and named it as ‘kavmiyetçilik’, and they defended ‘nation of Islam’ as the ‘true nationalism’. Later on a distinction between ‘pure Turkish nationalist’ and ‘Turkish-Islamists’ came into existence. Turkish-Islamists saw religion as the irreplaceable element of the nation and they defend a nationalism which is defined by religion.

In the Constitutional Era Islamist’s use of national discourses reached to a higher level. During Abdülhamit era the emphasis on the concepts of ‘’vatan/millet’’ and the politics of Pan-Islam showed the fluidity from Islamism to Nationalism.
During the transition term from Empire to Republic; intellectuals tried to overcome the tension between religion and nationalism through defining the Islam as one of the primary component of nationhood. What they were trying to do was actually turning Islam into a national religion. As I explained in the theory part nationalist ideology does not extinguish religious envision, rather nationalism maintains religion by transforming it. Modernist Muslim thinkers were trying to functionalize religion for the modernization and nationalization processes by proving the coherence between Islam and modern values. According to Bora; Turkish nationalist thinkers were in complience with Modernist Muslim thinkers. Because they needed the social and culturel power of Islam for their aims. This situation shows, as I explained in the theory part, the importance of religion in formation of nationalism as an ideology.
We can see the effects of  Islamic nationalism also during the National Struggle. Islamic identity played an important role during these years and Muslims were mobilized against unbelievers. Turkish national poet Mehmet Akif  Ersoy’s sermons, poems and the Turkish National Anthem also shows this strong relationship. These poems shows how Islam and nationalism were used at the same time to legitimaze the struggle in the eyes of the people. Also in the National Pact, and in the Treaty of Lausanne administration gave place to  Islam as an identity. However according to Bora; tides, transitions and indefinities between Islamism and Turkish nationalism were still continuing during the National Struggle and in the upcoming years of Republic religion was not counted as a fundamental element of new national identitiy.

Citizenship and legal and political bonds were put forward and the other elements of identity such as religion and ethnicity were excluded. However during 1930s ethnicity has been put forward and religion became an auxiliary element of national identity.
On the other hand; the Republic of Turkey has not totaly excluded religion. Kemalists and modernists did not see religion as a anachronism which is embeddes in history; rather they see it as an phenomenon which needs to be modernized. Because of nationalization was thought as the basis of modernization, the main purpose was nationalizing the Islam. Translating Qur’an and Ezan into Turkish were the results of this project. The efforts to purify Islam from the effects of Arab and Persian effect was one of the other implementations of the project of building a modern national religion. In a similar understanding, there were some interpretations that see Turkish nation as the most distinguished and dominant nation of Muslim world in the Republican Turkey. This understanding that see Turkey as the model and leader of Muslim World shows continuity with the era of caliphate, and still continues in our day. Even some scholars like Nihal Atsız claimed that Islam has stayed alive and improved thanks to Turks. These interpretations played an important role for the formation of nationalist-conservative discourse at the end of 1940s. 
As I have mentioned in the theory part one of the ways of analysing the relationship between religion and nationalism is treating them as analogous phenomena. There are some scholars that define nationalism as ‘the new religion of the people’. This definition is applicable for the Republican ideology. Through nationalism the sacred was secularized. The official nationalist discourse used religious symbols a lot. For example the concept of martyrdom was redefined as ‘to die for religion, country and nation’’.

Comparing Nutuk with Qur’an, descriptions of Atatürk as a godlike person, teaching Ataturkism as a religion; all of them were the indicators that shows the transfer of holiness from religion to national state.
However Republic was not totally successful in creating a social ethos. As from the end of the 1930s; the understanding that sees religion as one of the primary components of national identity started o gain strenght at the political and ideologial level. Turkish nationalists came gradually close to a religious nationalism. From 1960s to 1990s Turkish nationalists came close to a religious nationalism gradually and at the end nationalist- conservative sensibilities became established in the grassroots of MHP. This orientation from a secular and ethnic nationalist line to conservative nationalist line made MHP closer and acceptable for Islamists. In a parallel way; Islamism also headed toward nationalism by the efforts of Turkish Islamists like Şemsettin Günaltay and Eşref Edip. One of the other intellectuals that contributed to the formation of a nationalist-conservative discourse was Necip Fazıl.
As results of these devolopments the conservative Islamists and Turkish ethnic and secular nationalists came to a mutual understanding and formed the nationalist-conservative line.  During this term religious and national values united. This association gained strenght especially during 1950s and 1960s, and religion, state and nation merged with one another and became an indivisible whole. This new nationalist-conservative line determined the ideological coordinates of Turkish political right and this line attached to the official ideology over time. During 1980s religion was attached to official ideology in the highest level. In other words nationalism and Islamism lost their autonomies and melted in the state.
3Bora, Tanıl, 2009, Türk Sağının Üç Hali: Milliyetçilk, Muhafazakarlık, İslamcılık,İstanbul: Birikim Yayınları,pp:112-130

In short Turkish nationalists orientation from a secular and ethnic nationalist line to a conservative nationalist line and Islamism’s orientation toward a religious nationalism made them closer and acceptable for each other. We can see this rapprochement’s reflections also in the political life. During this term the transitivities between MSP-RP’s and MÇP’s lines increased and they made an electoral alliance in 1991 elections. I think this term shows some similarities with today’s Turkish political life. The references which is given by AKP’s and MHP’s politicians to the alliance in 1991 proves this argument. In that term MHP’s orientation from a secular and ethnic nationalist line to a conservative nationalist line made MHP acceptable for MSP-RP.
AK PARTY ERA
In recent years nationalist politics and national consciouness emerged at the same time with a period of intensified religiosity. As a result of this, in today’s Turkey, the frontiers among nationalist and Islamist and conservative positions became heavily indistinct. They are deeply imbricated and intertwined with each other. İdeologies and ideas reached to a high level of flexibility. Depending on the state of play, on the need and on the circumstances, all manner of material can be pressed into service. As Anthony Smith argues ; religious motives, narratives and symbols may be transmitted into the political domain and may be used to construct the nationalist claims. In parallel with this argument AKP utilizes religious texts, symbols and traditions, however at the same time it utilizes the familiar discourse of nationalism.
As against official, main stream Turkish nationalism which is highly intertwined with Kemalism; Ak Party devoloped a new nationalism discourse. Ak Party based its understanding of nationalism to the distinction between good(müsbet) and bad(menfi) nationalism which is previously put forward by Bediüzzaman Said-i Nursi. To define ‘good nationalism’ Ak Party mainly used Islamic terminology and used Islam as a base to define nation. For example during peace process the proposal of a ‘common Muslim identity’ was presented as a solution to Kurdish issue. In other words; Ak party rejected a nationalism which is based on racism and slogans. It prioritized Muslim identity over ethnic identity and holded a more universalist-Islamic perspective. (Bora, 2017, 241-268)
Ak Party’s nationalism has also a liberal aspect. Until mid-way of 2010s a devolopmentalist and civilizationist nationalist discourse have been mainly used. They associated national pride with the economic success ,performance of devolopment and welfare. It rejected a micro defensive and inward-looking Turkish nationalism. Instead, Muslim nationalists imagine Turkey to be a major world power, guided by an assertive and ambitious foreign policy that rests on building Turkey’s soft power and economic strength. According to this new liberal nationalist discourse which is bring along by the effects of globalization; rather than spending Turkey’s energy fighting with ‘ internal enemies’, Turkey should have used its energy to build a strong national economy, to gain scientific, technologic and economic successes. In short; Ak Party combined a new economist and liberal nationalism with an Islamic nationalism.  (Bora, 2017, 241-268)
However a lot of scholars argues that after mid-way of 2010s Ak Party’s understanding of nationalism underwent a transformation. During this proces the transitivities between Ak Party’s ‘liberal-conservative nationalism’, official Turkish nationalism and idealist and Turkish nationalism has increased and different aspects of nationalism has became intertwined. The various nationalist discourses in Turkey is today increasingly uniting. As a result of this transformation in its current politics we see a strong dose of Turkish nationalism and an ethno-cultural understanding of Turkishness beside Islamic nationalism. There is the emergence of both Islamist and Turkish nationalist expressions.
 There is a Neo-Ottoman rhetoric that is seen as‘adjunctive’ to Islamism but with which we cannot simply equate it and we can not explain it with ignoring the newly emerging nationalist trend. Among many Turkish religious conservatives the feeling that Turkey was the standard-bearer of Islamic civilization and should play a leadership role, particularly in the Muslim world revived again in recent years. This Neo-Ottoman rhetoric, religious and nationalist discourses are frequently used by politicians and are presented by other means of media through TV series etc.Portraying of Erdoğan as a descendant of a well-regarded Ottoman-era sultan and  celebrations of the conquest of Istanbul can be shown as a example to this newly Islamic nationalist line.
Within the ideology that shapes this alliance the style and air of Turkish nationalism and certain of its ritual elements that the MHP represents plays an important role. However we can still observe a similar paradox, that I mention in the theory part, between Ak Party’s Islamism and MHP’s nationalism. A nationalism that is compatible with that of the MHP is included within the ideology that shapes this ruling body. To overcome this paradox the ruling body refashions it. So we can say that this alliance came about in conjunction with that ideological supplementation. (Bora , 2017)
Through the ways of ‘Nationalizing Islam’ and ‘Islamizing nationalism’ two sides try to overcome this paradox. One aspect of this strategy is to ‘Islamize Atatürk’, a tendency that has been observable for some time. Atatürk is reframed and his meaning more or less totally transformed. Within the Islamist-nationalist discourse, Atatürk is consistently referred to as the gazi, the Islamic warrior hero, who secured Turkish national independence, while his central role as the main protagonist of a radical and secularist modernization project is duly ignored.(Alaranta, 2016)
When the AKP was founded, the party rejected the Kemalist national historical narrative, but alsorejected the Islamic-conservative national narrative promoted by the Islamist National Outlook movement from which the AKP sprang. Because AKP represented a liberal, pro-Western stance and opposed to these two nationalist narratives. (Alaranta, 2016) Ak Party founded as a democratic, conservative, nonconfessional movement. Its political ideology has been mainly defined by the term ‘conservative democratic’ and unlike its predecessors, the AKP did not centre its image around an Islamic identity or around an nationalist identity; indeed, its leaders underscored that it was not an Islamist or a nationalist party and emphasized that its focus was on democratization.
However, Today, the AKP is re-embracing the Islamic-conservative national narrative, while appropriating a redefined version of the Kemalist national historical narrative. Anti-Westernism  is the most important factor that uniting these various nationalist discourses in Turkey. AKP tries to consolidate a common, anti-Western ideological narrative by combining the different nationalist discourses; Islamic-conservative, Kemalist, far right nationalist and leftist nationalist to legitimate and uphold its power. (Alaranta, 2016)
CONCLUSION
In recent years we can observe the nationalism’s recourse to Islamism, and Turkish conservatism. Islamism and Turkish nationalism do not express fixed positions anymore and there is a transitivity between them thanks to their common roots in history. It is possible to explain this new trend in political ideology with Tanıl Bora’s analogy of ‘states of matter’. Islamism is without doubt a very powerful factor and constitutes the frame o Ak Party’s politics, but an important characteristic of this ideological configuration is that its content and motifs can be pretty fluid and can easily transform into nationalist domain.
The historical background is also effective to explain how these ideologies can become deeply imbricated and intertwined with each other. Because we can find the roots of this ideological combination in the history. There is a joint umbrella defined as being nationalist-conservative that stretches right back to the 1940’s and 1950’s. In fact, this is an umbrella that has never been fully closed. Within Islamism, there has been a tendency since the 70’s to depart from that umbrella, and that tendency has developed considerable momentum. Now, it is being reopened to assume tent-like dimensions. (Bora,2017)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
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